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BEIJING, Aug. 2 -- China put forward a revised draft
of joint document to the Six-Party Talks yesterday after intense debate on the
text over the weekend.
Negotiators from the six countries worked to hammer out agreement on a joint document of basic principles. However, no big development has been made as talks entered the seventh day,
and no ending date has yet been set.
The fourth round of the Six-Party Talks, opened last
Tuesday in Beijing, are the longest since the process was launched in 2003 and
have been characterized by frequent one-on-one meetings between Washington and
Pyongyang, the most critical participants.
Though no substantive progress has yet been seen,
observers noted that the fact they are still consulting with each other is in
itself a massive step forward.
It is reported that China's initial draft called on
Pyongyang to abandon its nuclear weapons programmes in exchange for the other
five participants' offering of security guarantees, economic aid and the
normalization of relations.
It did not address who should act first or if the
parties should move simultaneously, escaping the issue of timing, which has
sparked fierce debate.
China reworked the draft and proposed it to the talks
again yesterday after disagreements emerged at the weekend.
US chief negotiator Christopher Hill told reporters
that it was a tough process that would likely go on for some days.
No details of the revised draft agreement have been
released. Reuters quoted Hill as saying the new draft includes the mention of
Seoul's offer to supply Pyongyang with 2,000 megawatts of electricity if it
abandoned its nuclear weapon programmes.
But Reuters also quoted an unnamed diplomatic source
as saying that Pyongyang is worried that the deal could still pose a security
threat to the country. The worries centred on what would happen if Seoul cut off
the electricity supply.
In a press conference on Sunday, the Republic of
Korea's chief delegate to the talks, Song Min-soon, said Seoul's electricity aid
offer would be an important factor in solving the nuclear standoff.
Also on Sunday, Pyongyang's foreign minister
announced that his country would be willing to rejoin the nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty if the standoff was resolved.
(Source: China Daily) |